Download - Topographic Metrics

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Topographic Metrics• Many Topographic metrics have been

proposed. We’ll examine the three most common– Channel Steepness Index– Hillslope Gradients– Local Relief at Various Scales

• What are the relationships among these?• Which are most useful for gaging the

influence of tectonics on topography?

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80-90% Relief is on Bedrock Channels

Blue lines: drainage area > 1km2

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80-90% Relief is on Bedrock Channels

Threshold hillslope gradients dominate – no tectonic info

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Now in 3D

The Same Drainage Basin in Taiwan

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Beware: Many authors use “hillslope relief” and “local relief” (measured over up to 5km radius) as

interchangeable

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• Empirical data for well-adjusted fluvial systems around the globe yield the following scaling:

S = ksA-

Fluvial Scaling – Empirical Data

• Linear relationship between log(S) and log(A)

• ks is the channel steepness; is the concavity

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Flint’s Law: Mixed Bedrock-Alluvial Stream (Appalachians, VA)

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Flint’s Law: Mixed Bedrock-Alluvial Stream (Appalachians, VA)

S = ksA-

ks is a more-general equivalent to the SL index:No dependence on basin shape

colluvialreach ks-

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Duvall, Kirby, and Burbank, 2004, JGR-ES

ks

S = ksA-

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Concavity invariant with U

Steepness varies with U

Debris-flow chutesexpand with U

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Question: What Sets Erosion Rate?

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E = KAmSnTransient systems• Knickpoint in long profile• Break in slope-area scaling

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